Source: Environment Canterbury Regional Council
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Once established, it can be difficult and costly to control with seed spreading very easily on clothing, machinery, vehicles, feed and on livestock.
Chilean needle grass populations are very localised in Canterbury, with the majority of known sites in north Canterbury with one other site in West Melton.
Rust fungus kills pest plant
Uromyces pencanus is a rust fungus that damages the top layer of the Chilean needle grass leaves causing increased water loss and premature death. This technique is successful in dry conditions – a potential match made in heaven for north Canterbury conditions.
Invasive species advisor Dr Morgan Shields says that he has his fingers crossed for the success of the Chilean needle grass rust in Canterbury.
“Biocontrol is an excellent tool but also a fickle thing. You can do all the testing but never quite know how successful it will be until sometimes years down the track,” Morgan says.
“The rust is host specific, meaning that it will only attack Chilean needle grass.”
It’s been a long road to get this rust into Aotearoa from its native home of South America. It was first approved for release here in 2011 but researchers from Manaaki Whenua Landcare Research had to wait a decade for the export permit from Argentina before importing it in 2022.
Find out more
Environment Canterbury © 2024
Retrieved: 5:05pm, Tue 12 Nov 2024
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